PathSys: integrating molecular interaction graphs for systems biology

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The goal of information integration in systems biology is to combine information from a number of databases and data sets, which are obtained from both high and low throughput experiments, under one data management scheme such that t...

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Main Authors: Raval Alpan, Godbole Shubhada, Qian Xufei, Baitaluk Michael, Ray Animesh, Gupta Amarnath
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2006-02-01
Series:BMC Bioinformatics
Online Access:http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2105/7/55
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spelling doaj-4f093cfb373b47df88a716d07743885c2020-11-25T00:20:20ZengBMCBMC Bioinformatics1471-21052006-02-01715510.1186/1471-2105-7-55PathSys: integrating molecular interaction graphs for systems biologyRaval AlpanGodbole ShubhadaQian XufeiBaitaluk MichaelRay AnimeshGupta Amarnath<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The goal of information integration in systems biology is to combine information from a number of databases and data sets, which are obtained from both high and low throughput experiments, under one data management scheme such that the cumulative information provides greater biological insight than is possible with individual information sources considered separately.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Here we present PathSys, a graph-based system for creating a combined database of networks of interaction for generating integrated view of biological mechanisms. We used PathSys to integrate over 14 curated and publicly contributed data sources for the budding yeast (<it>S. cerevisiae</it>) and Gene Ontology. A number of exploratory questions were formulated as a combination of relational and graph-based queries to the integrated database. Thus, PathSys is a general-purpose, scalable, graph-data warehouse of biological information, complete with a graph manipulation and a query language, a storage mechanism and a generic data-importing mechanism through schema-mapping.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Results from several test studies demonstrate the effectiveness of the approach in retrieving biologically interesting relations between genes and proteins, the networks connecting them, and of the utility of PathSys as a scalable graph-based warehouse for interaction-network integration and a hypothesis generator system. The PathSys's client software, named BiologicalNetworks, developed for navigation and analyses of molecular networks, is available as a Java Web Start application at <url>http://brak.sdsc.edu/pub/BiologicalNetworks</url>.</p> http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2105/7/55
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Raval Alpan
Godbole Shubhada
Qian Xufei
Baitaluk Michael
Ray Animesh
Gupta Amarnath
spellingShingle Raval Alpan
Godbole Shubhada
Qian Xufei
Baitaluk Michael
Ray Animesh
Gupta Amarnath
PathSys: integrating molecular interaction graphs for systems biology
BMC Bioinformatics
author_facet Raval Alpan
Godbole Shubhada
Qian Xufei
Baitaluk Michael
Ray Animesh
Gupta Amarnath
author_sort Raval Alpan
title PathSys: integrating molecular interaction graphs for systems biology
title_short PathSys: integrating molecular interaction graphs for systems biology
title_full PathSys: integrating molecular interaction graphs for systems biology
title_fullStr PathSys: integrating molecular interaction graphs for systems biology
title_full_unstemmed PathSys: integrating molecular interaction graphs for systems biology
title_sort pathsys: integrating molecular interaction graphs for systems biology
publisher BMC
series BMC Bioinformatics
issn 1471-2105
publishDate 2006-02-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The goal of information integration in systems biology is to combine information from a number of databases and data sets, which are obtained from both high and low throughput experiments, under one data management scheme such that the cumulative information provides greater biological insight than is possible with individual information sources considered separately.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Here we present PathSys, a graph-based system for creating a combined database of networks of interaction for generating integrated view of biological mechanisms. We used PathSys to integrate over 14 curated and publicly contributed data sources for the budding yeast (<it>S. cerevisiae</it>) and Gene Ontology. A number of exploratory questions were formulated as a combination of relational and graph-based queries to the integrated database. Thus, PathSys is a general-purpose, scalable, graph-data warehouse of biological information, complete with a graph manipulation and a query language, a storage mechanism and a generic data-importing mechanism through schema-mapping.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Results from several test studies demonstrate the effectiveness of the approach in retrieving biologically interesting relations between genes and proteins, the networks connecting them, and of the utility of PathSys as a scalable graph-based warehouse for interaction-network integration and a hypothesis generator system. The PathSys's client software, named BiologicalNetworks, developed for navigation and analyses of molecular networks, is available as a Java Web Start application at <url>http://brak.sdsc.edu/pub/BiologicalNetworks</url>.</p>
url http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2105/7/55
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